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Above 1200 Sq/FT The Salvage Garage

Wokspaces above 1200 squarefeet.
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Strouty

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Joined
Mar 21, 2010
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38,224
Location
Southern Maine
I really need a push mower at both the Hill and the Lake, so this seemed like a good option for transporting it back and forth, we will see, might be a dud.
 
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Strouty

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Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
The old thermometer that is on the shaded side of the shop is reading just about 92 degrees, I believe it. :(

I have moved a few things around, inside temp is now about 70 degrees, I just turned the ceiling fans up to full tilt as the floor is starting to get damp. I have a few more things to do outside, then I can dub inside for a bit. I am just avoiding going to the Hill, I think I have had too much of it lately. If I go home, I have to work on the stairs, kind of planning on it anyways, just wanted to wait until it starts to cool down a bit. At this point, I just want to stay cool.
 
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Strouty

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Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
You are totally right Jake, it just doesn't always seem that way.

I had some paint custom matched for the maroon shelving, came out pretty nice, but I can see that I need to do some more welding before I paint it, then there is the sanding, should have done that before installing the sheet metal backer. Oh well, we can call it a proof of concept. I also saw that I was essentially out of roloc discs and decided to order some new ones, found a place that has lots of variations, so I ordered a bunch as samples, hopefully they will be decent enough, the price was right. There were good reviews, but I have not used any of their products yet (benchmark abrasives), they are definitely imported, but the price of the US made stuff has gone crazy lately.
 

rvieceli

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 3, 2013
Messages
779
Location
Illinois
Strouty , making good progress. Keep it up!

On that Mayflower trailer, don’t think of it as a regular over the road trailer. All those extra doors are there for access on smaller loads BUT if you will open a couple of those side doors in addition to your main rear doors it helps a lot with the heat.

Ron
 
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Strouty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
I may be able to test it out tonight, my GF is doing some "no mow May" for the bees or something, so she asked me not to mow at the house. The Hill has some grass, but nothing to really test the mower and the Lake is the same way. Maybe I can convince her to let me mow a small area. She doesn't ask a lot, so when she does, I try and oblige her.

Ron, unfortunately, I can't open any of the doors except the rear doors, I am parked too close to the shop on one side and there are suburbans on the other side. :(
 

walrus

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 12, 2008
Messages
11,684
Location
Maine
I may be able to test it out tonight, my GF is doing some "no mow May" for the bees or something, so she asked me not to mow at the house. The Hill has some grass, but nothing to really test the mower and the Lake is the same way. Maybe I can convince her to let me mow a small area. She doesn't ask a lot, so when she does, I try and oblige her.

Ron, unfortunately, I can't open any of the doors except the rear doors, I am parked too close to the shop on one side and there are suburbans on the other side. :(
The no mow May is a good idea, feeds the bees with early flowers. I'm not mowing as much as I would normally either.
 
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Strouty

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Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
Monster Garage made a drag car using about $60k worth of Milwaukee's V28 batteries. I would imagine the 18 volt 12.0 batteries would be much better.
 
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kent_323is

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2009
Messages
274
Location
South Dakota
I'm glad to see some favorable info & reviews about Benchmark abrasives. I just found them recently, and was thinking about ordering some flapper discs from them as they are much more reasonable than anywhere else locally. Big box stores and even harbor freight too expensive in my book.
For reference, when I was still traveling over to China for business, I could buy those flapper discs for $0.50 each compared to $6.99 & up here. I bought ~100 of them and brought back with me, but now I'm nearing the end of them.
I've been trying a few of the ones available locally, and I'm not terribly impressed. The thicker ones (and more expensive) do last longer, but not that much longer. They all work very well when fresh, and they all cut much less aggressively after they're partially used. I prefer the thinner ones better, even though they don't last as long as they seem to cut better over the life they have and are easier to maneuver into tight spots for grinding.
 

jollygreengiant

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 10, 2013
Messages
2,368
Location
Ontario, Canada

Never say never. I seen a rendering of an electric suburban based on the new electric silverado and it actually looked pretty good.

Man Strouty, I'm just getting caught up on 2 weeks of your posts. For someone who always says that they never get much done you sure seem to get lots of stuff done from this end.
 

Prospecter

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Joined
May 16, 2015
Messages
2,443
Location
Maine
When I was working, and I had a lot of paper to move, I'd measure the stack to see how many inches I could clear by the end of the day.
 

mybigwarwagon

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
4,428
Location
Vale, Nc
Ug. I hate paperwork. I did workman's comp investigations for a while. The reports were terrible. It was bad enough following someone around all day recording what they did. Having to sit for hours re-watching the tape and telling what was on it was brutal
 
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Strouty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
Can’t even see the desk, it is actually deeper than it was when I started. No place to put it right now.

Been working on the Ponch this morning, ran into a snag with wiring terminals, so far it looks like the steering should be a direct swap. The tires are two inches taller, so not sure if that will be an issue, if it is, we can swap them out for the old ones.

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Strouty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
You are very close, I need the forklift to start moving things up into the office, it is the only one that I own (that is functional) that can reach the top landing of the stairs.

We fixed the E-brake on it, swapped out the rear steering mechanism, and did a few other things to it. Unfortunately, the steering isn't working properly, it had been weird for a long time, I just thought it was do to lack of hydraulic fluid, the leak was pretty bad. At least now it doesn't leak, we did have to do a "temporary" fix so that you can hot wire the power steering when needed. In order to fix things, we will need a wiring schematic, there has to be some sort of hydraulic pressure switch and a relay somewhere on the machine, but we don't know where to look. The obvious place is on the frame, tucked behind the battery, don't really want to move the battery until we know where things are. Anyways, we did that and dealt with the maroon shelf and the desk area, got the drawers mounted and the shelf all welded up. I would have loved to get more done, but it was all we could do to get that stuff done.

I am beat, my knees hurt, my left heel feels like I bruised it, and I didn't eat lunch, so I am hangry.
 
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